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Mountain birch under multiple stressors – heavy metal‐resistant populations co‐resistant to biotic stress but maladapted to abiotic stress
Authors:J K ERÄNEN  J NILSEN  V E ZVEREV  M V KOZLOV
Institution:1. Section of Ecology, Department of Biology, University of Turku, Turku, Finland;2. Phytotron of the University of Troms?, Troms?, Norway
Abstract:Stress adaptations often include a trade‐off of weakened performance in nonlocal conditions, resulting in divergent selection, and potentially, genetic differentiation and evolutionary adaptation. Results of a two‐phase (greenhouse and field) common garden experiment demonstrated adaptation of mountain birch (Betula pubescens subsp. czerepanovii) populations from industrially polluted areas of the Kola Peninsula, north‐western Russia, to heavy metals (HM), whereas no adaptations to wind or drought stress were detected in populations from wind‐exposed sites. HM‐adapted seedlings were maladapted to drought but less palatable (co‐resistant) to insect herbivores, even under background HM concentrations. The absence of adaptations to harsh microclimate and the generally high adaptive potential of mountain birch, a critical forest forming tree in subarctic Europe, need to be accounted for in models predicting consequences of human‐driven environmental changes, including the projected climate change.
Keywords:abiotic stress  Betula pubescens  common garden  co‐tolerance  evolutionary adaptation  heavy metal resistance  herbivory  rapid evolution  shelter  trade‐off
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